Getting to the core of the matter

Architecture students offer vision to attract thousands of residents downtown

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Put a halt to highrises, scrap surface parking lots and make more livable low- to mid-rise places for twice as many people to live downtown.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 17/04/2018 (2192 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

Put a halt to highrises, scrap surface parking lots and make more livable low- to mid-rise places for twice as many people to live downtown.

University of Manitoba planning and architecture students pitched that vision to city planners, councillors and developers Wednesday.

RUTH BONNEVILLE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
University of Manitoba faculty of architecture and urban planning students host some City of Winnipeg councillors and city planners, and CentreVenture and private industry representatives to show them their fresh ideas on how to revitalize downtown.
RUTH BONNEVILLE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS University of Manitoba faculty of architecture and urban planning students host some City of Winnipeg councillors and city planners, and CentreVenture and private industry representatives to show them their fresh ideas on how to revitalize downtown.

Prof. Richard Milgrom, head of the city planning department at the University of Manitoba, said the students’ urban design studio aims to show what’s possible.

They laid out their vision for a healthy downtown with 36,000 more residents than there are now, and a lot more public spaces and amenities to attract them.

A target of 36,000 more downtown residents “is actually a reasonable, aspirational goal,” CentreVenture Development Corp. president and CEO Angela Mathieson told them Wednesday. “By 2035, Winnipeg’s population is expected to hit one million people.”

She applauded the students for tackling the redevelopment of a sprawling downtown. “It’s so daunting.”

The students have been seeking appropriate scales of development and questioning the idea of building larger “skyline” projects that consist of hundreds of units and take years to build, Milgrom said.

With the relatively slow growth of Winnipeg, the concentration of population in large buildings may undermine attempts to fill in vacant property and surface parking lots that hinder downtown growth, he said.

The students looked at the possibilities and challenges of encouraging smaller-scale development that can provide downtown housing, accommodate higher residential densities, but also enhance streets as public places. They envisioned downtown as a destination, as well as neighbourhoods and places for everyday living.

Seeing a skyline dotted with new highrises might make people feel Winnipeg is more prosperous, but spreading out the 16,000 additional residential units required for 36,000 more people in low- and mid-rise buildings would revitalize more of downtown and make for more livable places, the students showed.

A downtown with a full-service grocery store and elementary schools within walking distance are key, as well as better active transportation so people won’t need cars. Right now, 49 per cent of the land downtown is geared to car-oriented development, they said.

RUTH BONNEVILLE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Prof. Richard Milgrom, head of the city planning department, was on hand to facilitate questions.
RUTH BONNEVILLE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS Prof. Richard Milgrom, head of the city planning department, was on hand to facilitate questions.

To make downtown better in winter, there’d be colourful facades on more buildings. There would be an emphasis on sunlight preservation and wind reduction in planning and design. In the summer, there’d be stormwater management features, more green space and fewer paved surface parking lots that absorb the heat and make for a sweltering downtown. The students want to keep the same number of parking spaces but incorporate them in the design of buildings and get rid of the surface lots.

City Coun. Jenny Gerbasi, who was first elected in 1998, said surface parking lots have long haunted urban planners and developers. “It’s been talked about for years.” Unless the tax structure changes — such as taxing the properties based on the real potential value of the lots — or there is some incentive to sell the money-making land, owners won’t give them up.

She encouraged the students to take their ideas and run with them by getting elected to public office. The councillor for Fort Rouge-East Fort Garry has decided not to run again in the election this fall.

“Does anyone want to run for council? The seat’s available in Fort Rouge,” she said.

carol.sanders@freepress.mb.ca

Carol Sanders

Carol Sanders
Legislature reporter

After 20 years of reporting on the growing diversity of people calling Manitoba home, Carol moved to the legislature bureau in early 2020.

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